I like Jeter and do not have this title so the Jeter freebie is great.

Jane Carver of Waar sounds as if it might be fun. I was a big ERB fan when I was a child/early teen, so will be interesting to see how the author handles his "homage." Great cover too. Kind of "retro." Intentionally so, I am sure.

I appreciate the Jeter. I haven't read much by him (mostly because when I was most interested after reading Farewell Horizontal, it was pretty impossible to find anything by him), but I like what I've read.

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Originally Posted by hwlester

Probably the easiest "solution" is to put a disclaimer on the first post something like:

These books were free at time they were posted, but may not remain free. Please verify the price before hitting the Buy button at Amazon.

Of course I know that the deals don't usually last long (except when they do) but personally I appreciate it when people post that a particular is dead. Probably if I click on a dead one again, I'll still post that it's dead and get in trouble again., but so it goes

Two omnibus editions of Octavia Butler's works from Open Road are $10-11 right now. (The first part of the Xenogenesis Trilogy is today's (10/13) Kindle Daily Deal, but this omnibus edition is about the same total price as each remaining volume's individual price.)

Butler’s acclaimed Xenogenesis trilogy about humanity’s struggle for survival after nuclear apocalypse, and the alien race that could save the world—or destroy it

The newest stage in human evolution begins in outer space. Survivors of a cataclysmic nuclear war awake to find themselves being studied by the Oankali, tentacle-covered galactic travelers whose benevolent appearance hides their surprising plan for the future of mankind. The Oankali arrive not just to save humanity, but to bond with it—crossbreeding to form a hybrid species that can survive in the place of its human forebears, who were so intent on self-destruction. Some people resist, forming pocket communities of purebred rebellion, but many realize they have no choice. The human species inevitably expands into something stranger, stronger, and undeniably alien.

Butler’s Lilith’s Brood is both a thrilling, provocative meditation on the expansion of the human gene pool and an epic story of how it takes more than DNA to make someone human.

This ebook features an illustrated biography of Octavia E. Butler including rare images from the author’s estate.

The complete Patternist series—Butler’s acclaimed vision of a world transformed by a secret race of telepaths and the violence, intolerance, and plague that follow their rise to power

In the late seventeenth century, two immortals meet in an African forest. Anyanwu is a healer, a three-hundred-year-old woman who uses her wisdom to help those around her. The other is Doro, a malevolent despot who has mastered the power of stealing the bodies of others when his wears out. Together they will change the world.

Over the next three centuries, Doro mounts a colossal selective breeding project, attempting to create a master race of telepaths. He succeeds beyond his wildest dreams, splitting the human race down the middle and establishing a new world order dominated by the most manipulative minds on Earth.

In these four novels, Butler tells the story that began her legendary career: a mythic tale of the transformation of civilization.

This ebook features an illustrated biography of Octavia E. Butler including rare images from the author’s estate.

Two omnibus editions of Octavia Butler's works from Open Road are $10-11 right now. (The first part of the Xenogenesis Trilogy is today's (10/13) Kindle Daily Deal, but this omnibus edition is about the same total price as each remaining volume's individual price.)

With a tip of the cap to the fabulous Books on the Knob bargain and free ebook blog, Amazon is offering PS Publishing's collection of 4 Peter Crowther short stories, The Land at the End of the Working Day, for free, at least as of 10/15/2012. This is a repeat freebie, I believe.

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A collection of four stories by Peter Crowther with individual introductions by Ian McDonald, Joe Hill, Elizabeth Hand and Lucius Shepard.

On a windswept corner of Manhattan, just a stone's throw from the weathered facade of the legendary Chelsea Hotel, there's a small two-flight walkdown bar called The Land At The End Of The Working Day. Stop in and rest awhile... you'll meet the most fascinating people.

There's Jack Fedogan, widowed these past few years and still carrying a torch for his beloved Phyllis while he plays smooth jazz on the barroom's battered PA system. And the wonderful triptych of regular imbibers... Edgar Nornhoevan, Jim Leafman and McCoy Brewer, meeting up to escape the world outside or to have a drink with like-minded souls or maybe just to share a few jokes.

And meet one-off visitors. Folks like Gandalph Cohen, the magical caretaker of the City's welfare; Front-Page McGuffin, who, it has to be said, has been in better health; Bernard Boyce Bennington, who carries a torch for a woman who loved him and left him (with a bizzarely magical memento); and Horatio Fortesque and Meredith Lidenbrook Greenblat, scholars of the works of the great Jules Verne and hot on the trail to a doorway to another world... a doorway that could just be situated in a backroom of one of Manhattan's strangest watering holes.

This is the first of five books in the GrinOlsson's Asgard Science fiction series.

In ancient days, mankind by word of mouth passed on their history from the ancient fathers and mothers throughout the generations, to their present day sons and daughters. These ancient peoples used descriptive basic words to explain an advanced technological species of intelligent beings that used their chariots to travel on land, in the sea, and through the air, as well as the contact they had with humans. The third planet from the sun, our “Earth” was identified in their ancient language as Midgard or the middle planet. The ancient scrolls and sagas detail other worlds in a great inter planetary battle called Ragnarok where a planet named Asgard was destroyed. In the fifth orbital energy ring of our sun lays a belt of asteroids from another historical time, where an ancient fifth planet somehow was destroyed.

To celebrate the mass market paperback release of his World and British Fantasy Award nominated Osama (a previous freebie), Lavie Tidhar is currently offering the ebook version of his novelette, The Last Osama, for free on his website. The ebooks is available in both epub and mobi formats.

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The Last Osama explores the world after the capture of Osama bin Laden in the Abbottabad Compound on May 2nd, 2011. In a world profoundly altered by the death, a bounty hunter is hired by the remnants of an army to travel down the Euphrates. His mission: track down and eliminate the last of the Osamas.

But how do you kill an idea?

A postscript to Lavie Tidhar’s World Fantasy nominated novel Osama, written after bin Laden’s capture and two months before Tidhar’s novel was coming out, this is a surreal tale of meta-fiction and hyper-pulp as written by both Tidhar and his pulp alter-ego, Mike Longshott. 7300 words.

To celebrate the mass market paperback release of his World and British Fantasy Award nominated Osama (a previous freebie), Lavie Tidhar is currently offering the ebook version of his novelette, The Last Osama, for free on his website.

Thank you, got it! I picked the novel up when it was free and enjoyed it.

Great, never heard of these, and now I'm hooked.....now I'm going to spend alot of money on these....I hate you, I really do.

The series has been around for 4 years and this is the first time I've heard of it. And darn both of you. I'm nearly through the free one and have picked up a couple more from Smashwords. There's a couple free ebooks of the first two seasons (authorized bootlegs, as Elizabeth Bears points to them on the forum) at: